The Great Mortality: An Intimate History of the Black Death, the Most Devastating Plague of All Time
![]() | P.S.By John Kelly Harper Perennial, 2006, Paperback Customer Rating: 66 reviews Recommend |
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La moria grandissima began its terrible journey across the European and Asian continents in 1347, leaving unimaginable devastation in its wake. Five years later, twenty-five million people were dead, felled by the scourge that would come to be called the Black Death. The Great Mortality is the extraordinary epic account of the worst natural disaster in European history — a drama of courage, cowardice, misery, madness, and sacrifice that brilliantly illuminates humankind's darkest days when an old world ended and a new world was born.
A book chronicling one of the worst human disasters in recorded history really has no business being entertaining. But John Kelly's The Great Mortality is a page-turner despite its grim subject matter and graphic detail. Credit Kelly's animated prose and uncanny ability to drop his reader smack in the middle of the 14th century, as a heretofore unknown menace stalks Eurasia from "from the China Sea to the sleepy fishing villages of coastal Portugal [producing] suffering and death on a scale that, even after two world wars and twenty-seven million AIDS deaths worldwide, remains astonishing." Take Kelly's vivid description of London in the fall of 1348: "A nighttime walk across Medieval London would probably take only twenty minutes or so, but traversing the daytime city was a different matter.... Imagine a shopping mall where everyone shouts, no one washes, front teeth are uncommon and the shopping music is provided by the slaughterhouse up the road." Yikes, and that's before just about everything with a pulse starts dying and piling up in the streets, reducing the population of Europe by anywhere from a third to 60 percent in a few short years. In addition to taking readers on a walking tour through plague-ravaged Europe, Kelly heaps on the ancillary information and every last bit of it is captivating. We get a thorough breakdown of the three types of plagues that prey on humans; a detailed account of how the plague traveled from nation to nation (initially by boat via flea-infested rats); how floods (and the appalling hygiene of medieval people) made Europe so susceptible to the disease; how the plague triggered a new social hierarchy favoring women and the proletariat but also sparked vicious anti-Semitism; and especially, how the plague forever changed the way people viewed the church. Engrossing, accessible, and brimming with first-hand accounts drawn from the Middle Ages, The Great Mortality illuminates and inspires. History just doesn't get better than that. — Kim Hughes
Title: The Great Mortality: An Intimate History of the Black Death, the Most Devastating Plague of All Time (P.S.)
Sales Rank: 21711 in Books
Author: John Kelly
Publisher: Harper Perennial, 2006-02-01, Paperback, 400 pages, ISBN: 0060006935
Package Dimensions: 7.8 x 5.3 x 1.2 inches, 0.6 pounds
- Non-specialist popular history
- _The Great Mortality_ is a synthesis of more specialized scholarly texts using some of the latest creative non-fiction techniques to make it more accessible for the general reader. Due to the nature of the sources, the Black Death is actually a very difficult subject matter to turn into a readable narrative - as so many failed past attempts can attest - and this is probably the best More reviews
- Great Book!
- This book was very well written and researched. Anyone interested in learning more about what life was like before, during, and after the plague of the 1300's will be aptly rewarded by The Great Mortality. Kelly is witty, factual, creative, and weaves it all together with a true appreciation of the human spirit. Great book! More reviews
- Gross and utterly engrossing
- I am a professor, and use this book as a required text in one of my upper-level seminars. My students and I absolutely devoured this book. Its combination of primary accounts and statistics on the one hand, and its vivid, accessible writing style on the other, made for lively and enthusiastic class discussion. I highly recommend it for anyone who is looking for legitimate popular history More reviews
- The Great Mortality...the plague of 1348
- I started reading a book called the Black Death, which is so ponderous and boring, one would have to be a medieval monk to follow it. Then I found the Great Mortality, and it is so well written and organized, that I had no problem following the path of the bubonic plague that bedeviled Europe and Asia in the 1300s. One can't help wishing you could More reviews
- Vivid, Brilliant, Alive
- The most extraordinary thing about John Kelly's book, The Great Mortality; an Intimate History of the Black Death, The Most Devastating Plague of All Times is how a book centered about Death can be so alive and vital. The multitude of compulsively readable, brilliantly written vignettes draw us into the lives of the people and we mourn their loss as we mourn those More reviews

